On 2/20/25 01:46, Mina Almasry wrote:
On Wed, Feb 19, 2025 at 2:40 PM Pavel Begunkov asml.silence@gmail.com wrote:
On 2/17/25 23:26, Mina Almasry wrote:
On Thu, Feb 13, 2025 at 5:17 AM Pavel Begunkov asml.silence@gmail.com wrote:
...
> It's asserting that sizeof(ubuf_info_msgzc) <= sizeof(skb->cb), and > I'm guessing increasing skb->cb size is not really the way to go. > > What I may be able to do here is stash the binding somewhere in > ubuf_info_msgzc via union with fields we don't need for devmem, and/or
It doesn't need to account the memory against the user, and you actually don't want that because dmabuf should take care of that. So, it should be fine to reuse ->mmp.
It's also not a real sk_buff, so maybe maintainers wouldn't mind reusing some more space out of it, if that would even be needed.
netmem skb are real sk_buff, with the modification that frags are not
We were discussing ubuf_info allocation, take a look at msg_zerocopy_alloc(), it has nothing to do with netmems and all that.
Yes. My response was regarding the suggestion that we can use space in devmem skbs however we want though.
Well, at least I didn't suggest that, assuming "devmem skbs" are skbs filled with devmem frags. I think the confusion here is thinking that skb->cb you mentioned above is about "devmem skbs", while it's special skbs without data used only to piggy back ubuf allocation.
Ah, I see. I still don't see how we can just increase the size of skb->cb when it's shared between these special skbs and regular skbs.
The approach was not to increase ->cb but rather reuse some other unused in the path sk_buff fields. Though, looking at __msg_zerocopy_callback(), maybe it's better not to entertain that, as the skb is queued into the error queue. But again, not like you need it.
Functionally speaking, it'd be perfectly fine to get rid of the warning and allocate it with kmalloc().
More suggestions to refactor unrelated things to force through a msg->sg_from_iter approach.
Mina, you're surprising me. Neither I suggested to do that, just trying to help with your confusion using analogies, nor I said that it'd be welcome, nor it's somehow "unrelated". And "forcing" is a misstatement, so far I've been extending a recommendation on how to make it better.
...
If you've already done, maybe you can post it as a draft? At least it'll be obvious why you say it's more complicated.
I don't have anything worth sharing. Just went down this rabbit hole and saw a bunch of MSG_ZEROCOPY checks (!msg->msg_ubuf checks around MSG_ZEROCOPY code) and restrictions (skb->cb size) need to be addressed and checks to be added. From this thread you seem to be suggesting more changes to force in a msg->sg_from_iter approach adding to the complications.
To sum up, you haven't tried it.
The complication could be worth it if there was some upside, but I don't see one tbh. Passing the binding down to zerocopy_fill_skb_from_devmem seems like a better approach to my eye so far
The upside is that 1) you currently you add overhead to common path (incl copy),
You mean the unlikely() check for devmem before delegating to skb_zerocopy_fill_from_devmem? Should be minimal.
Like keeping the binding in tcp_sendmsg_locked(). The point is, as you mentioned overhead ("adds more checks to the fast MSG_ZEROCOPY paths"), all things included the current approach will be adding more of it to MSG_ZEROCOPY and also other users.
- passing it down through all the function also
have overhead to the zerocopy and MSG_ZEROCOPY path, which I'd assume is comparable to those extra checks you have.
Complicating/refactoring existing code for devmem TCP to force in a msg->sg_from_iter and save 1 arg passed down a couple of functions doesn't seem like a good tradeoff IMO.
- tcp would
need to know about devmem tcp and its bindings, while it all could be in one spot under the MSG_ZEROCOPY check.
I don't see why this is binding to tcp somehow. If anything it makes
I don't get what you're saying, but it refers to devmem binding, which you add to TCP path, and so tcp now has to know how to work with devmem instead of all of it being hidden behind the curtains of ubuf_info. And it sticks out not only for tcp, but for all zerocopy users by the virtue of dragging it down through all helpers.
the devmem TX implementation follow closely MSG_ZEROCOPY, and existing
Following closely would be passing ubuf just like MSG_ZEROCOPY does, and not plumbing devmem all the way through all helpers.
MSG_ZEROCOPY code would be easily extended for devmem TX without having to also carry refactors to migrate to msg->sg_from_iter
Don't be afraid of refactoring when it makes things better. We're talking about minor changes touching only bits in the direct vicinity of your set.
approach (just grab the binding and pass it to skb_zerocopy_iter_stream).
- When you'd want
another protocol to support that, instead of a simple
ubuf = get_devmem_ubuf();
You'd need to plumb binding passing through the stack there as well.
Similar to above, I think this approach will actually extend easier to any protocol already using MSG_ZEROCOPY, because we follow that closely instead of requiring refactors to force msg->sg_from_iter approach.